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THE SEATTLE PAGE % TRUCK WRECKED; CAR SHASHES STAR TAkus TROUSSEAU AS SHE FLEES 1,313 Graduate From | 6 High Schools Here HERE'S MORE ABOUT a Police Are oking for a nuree . ‘ | ‘ Six high schools graduated 1,813! who, it alleged, stole a trousseat bi ; j students at their varloux exercises | for her wedding to a sailor and digs ‘a | “TARTS ON PAGE ONE Wednesday night. Graduate of appeared from the home of Carl Ay (= \ ae . Broadway high school, numbering| Fisher. She took a diamond’ einige : | Load of Camp Lewis in Driver Severely Cut by Fly- 34, received their diplomae at Worth $500, and two suits of Tale 4 sugar, they are demand thruot | : é : ee fe's clothes, Fisher said. j Se ag Phe AE ket ongeatlhreelyr Smashu ing Glass Meany hall, University of Washing: |" Po. nited States The market 4 | sure to grow; Western Washington ton pe schools held their exer Smoking in public places and the is ned to be to strawberries | TACOMA, June 16-—One soldier ix} In a@ collision between a taxicab Clses tn their school auditoriums, ‘wale of cigarets barred in Utah. I | what California ia to oranges. But | dead and 12 others Ne painfully In-land a Phinney ave. street car at N. == — it will take tine —ar in the mean- | Jured at the Camp Lewis hospital 26th st and Fremont ave. at 104 while the great strawberry garma | dy, following the wreck of an , : A = at 40 i e danger of destrucdo 1y bus loaded with 30 passengers |P ™ ednenda. 2 G, Curtis 1% = Prominent Man and Church are in danger of deatrucsion. Qe | Pie Mann ta edie’ tortie te Wives’ Of thd Gk, 0 9007 Firat ave are : On Bainbridge istand, where [Ot the entrance to camp shortly 2 6 Pind pass! ED k: RICK r 4 Official Is Named by Girl- thie Tinsel airawbeerien in~ the | fF Pldbiaht, Bix others suftered iN. W., seorived & severe laceration : ‘ workd, it is clu | are pra minor injuries on the head and arms from fal Mother as Responsible duced, the eve te greeted wih | -2Cvate Arthur T, Hava eee et cn eeeene completel & NELSON . *. | Coast artillery, died in the camp ho: : pry eee | cies gr on Oe 04 reer cite iio tae pital this morning. His skull had|Wrecked and was thrown 60 feet Mullicane, a housemaid of 20, will be | practiced by the produ [ Paes sraerured sacivey Rell waontdant base FIFTH AVENUE AND PINE STREET the center of a battle involving large grow to a size un PRIVATE'S SKULL 1S Curtis’ auto was being towed down fortunes when she goes on trial here Ww years ago, Seores | PRACTURID: WON Live jthe Fremont hill by acfriend when June 20 for murder is will be ruined if | Private Henry Hibbs, 67th | Curtis’ steering gear failed, His |} The girt (s cuarged with killing her the bottom of the market drops» | Conant artillery, suffered a fracture of |Machine was struck by an inbound Rameless baby out next week, as is predicted. the skull and internal injuries, He | Phinney car 500 Yards of In the confession she has made to is not expected to live Curtly was foundjin a dazed condi The farmers have contracted to of his Police, Erie names the president of The bus, carrying the party back| tion near the wretkage ma | Silk Moire Ribbons sell 40,000 crates to the cannert & Missouri mber of Commerce This contract ro hod aie ies "ona to »p nic at American|chiné, a half block from where it Me huveh official as the father of end of the week. ‘Thé chhnerian dee | LAK®, Was, golns h speed, and|had been struck. He was rushed to } her baby. This man is 48 anf clare that they wifl handle no more | f#lled to make the turn at the camp|the elty hospital by @ py K t Wealthy | fruit. Approximately. 0,000 craton | trance, it was reported, It crashed| where his condition Thursday wa ) This man has denied the girl's Will remaincon the bush. rediened | into one of the stone pillars at the|suid to be not » Special Yard charges and announced on leaving | by the sun, mature, Waiting to. be| enews eee Missouri recently that he was on bis way here to fight them as yet arrived. Aiding in the dete were hurled 6 pinned ©. The car was pleked! me of the soldiers nst a pillar, ot ath the wreck completely demolished Auto Tips Over; Two || EAVY quality, all-silk Ribbons in Moire Antique Are Severely Hurt finish, featured for this offering at a specially He has not of the girl Farmers aes tpetee Saucers wat only 6 and 8 cents a pound. La Six of the injured artillery men,| Tipped over in an automobile when low price. ice interented in Driee| year the price fas 18 and 20 cents, | Whose names were not reported, were | the front wheels stuck in the gravel ng oc iS Ba : ‘ quent “ ot pay to pick the berrie The nftal, and later were able to return | Oswald, champion typewriter oper P ; ‘ . Umitea money to fight for her free- pa Mt gta Si ia a Oh oie Wales lie tor of the world, and LL. Riggs, {| ,and in these colors: Mais, Pink, Rose, Brown, Black, 5 nae o eo nde a re a Javy is i > g Thi I$ BROKEN Encouraged by last season's de. | BOY OF 14 18 na peg a Bs ott Basie Red, Navy, Turquoise, Light-blue and White. 1X HEALTH mand, hundreds of farmers set out + INJURED heian ah day nieh Special, 45¢ yard. —F In the meantime Erie, pale, wasted additional acres in) strawberries ee hurt we Becet, Heroia| “ure! Nohine skidded ‘aoroes the sie uceweale vie and wan from tortured memories, | Stump land was cleared, old plants | Dreed, Sergt. William Winsor, Cor-| gravel against a pile of were torn up and acre fresh land was ries. Corporal Rus Privates Harry EB. But Arce, Joe on acre of set out in strawber poral Warner Hause, oll Barton. ler, Lee Gault, Bernard T turned over, but was righte: its top fell « ing glass from t lies on a cot in the county hospital, broken in health and in spirit. This is the story of the tragedy that the st other log e broken windshield Exceptional Values in | | | | | | | girl whispers from her cot ‘Then with a bumper crop, an early | Dratowski, "A ae ea cv cut Oswald on the hands and knees. “I went from the farm of my week of warm weather matured the | Charles Tindra, Francis Tucker, vgs, who was driving, was cut on : F : BE 4' stein, coun yi bon ‘ ~ crop. public wan caught. un.| ¥earold #on of Serst, Tucker, ‘als0| the \enea ersey 51 nderwear ing a good name—to this man's = a awares canneries, with thou-| Was among the injured © two men were returning from ands of pounds of fruit unsold, re-| Occupants of the car were scat am, where Oswald had given Parents in January, 1918, as a maid They paid me $4 a week and my board. I was then 16 years old “In August the man I accuse came For the third time, Bernice Weinthal, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. M. Weinthal, has won the interborough baby contest held annually at New York. Plenty of fresh air and vege- tered on the ground, where they lay in a dazed Liio& until two men. returning from leave at Tacoma, saw the disaster and summoned an ambu used take their to Railroads pleaded car short }a demonstration in typewriter oper | ation at the state ni usual supply 8 ar the markets in the Middle West and mal school. $1.95 and $2.95 : back. He was a handsome man, with| tables made her healthy, says Mrs. Weinthal. in Montana were supplied by Can: | , REMARKABLY-ATTRACTIVE offering of 600 @ beautiful black beard. He took an | i sdian producers. lance from the post hospital PROSPECTS OF A BUMPER CROP Aieate 58 : . Raterent:tn ine and I wae very much | ——— ‘Tons of berries nre now on the|,, The truck was a total wreck, but) Mr and Mrs, Norman Thilmont, « ests, Bloomers and Camisoles in lustrous, flattered. He took me to picture,;] HERE’S STARTS |] hush. ‘They will have to be picked | 't# ensine kept running after the ac-}tormer resident gf this town, are 1 finely-woven Jersey Silk, at very low prices. és shows occasionally, bought me candy | MORE ON ext week. Seattle will have to ab-| @#2% happy parents of an 11.pound baby and sodas and sometimes silk stock- | = The name of the driver of the ma-Jiorn April 6. This makes three 120 JERSEY SILK VESTS $1.95 —very good quality, in pink, with hemstitched bodice tops and ribbon shoulder straps, $1.95. 72 JERSEY SILK CAMISOLES $1.95 sorb the supply or one of its great ndustries will be ruined. That is why all those interest. ed in the welfare of Seattle and Western Washington are taking for their slogan: “Buy, Can, Eat Strawberries!” ABOUT PAGE 1 chine was not stated in the reports and no information was given out at Camp Lewis, It 18 said that a cor poral was at the wheel and that he disappeared after the smaghup. H ought by camp authorities bably will be held for investi when found. healthy boys for Mr. Thitmont's fut Lake ings. “He told me that he loved me. I was sure that I loved him. KNEW LITTLE \ ABOUT LOVE “It seemed so unreal,” she said, and her tone was awed even then, “to think that a polished man of the world, such as he, should fall in love with a girl whose whole life had been spent on a farm. “He was a member of the proud Count ure farm Ind.) Times. | It was repre- Now it is represented that the bulk of the French army of occupa fighting spirit of the people at burning point. sente@ that most of the French troops were black. The Mediterranean sea has tides of from five to seven feet. Bureau of Missing tion is black. They have a name for this French army of occupation. They call it “Die schwarze schmach"—the black taint or the black shame. The comic papers are al ways harping on this matter. Propaganda about it is used in every conceivable form. 5,000 CAPTURED Congramaan Dies of Heart Attack est family in town and said that hi . . 1 Wwagierianon, $ aa | ‘ 4 : siwiieiat is s| Propagandiats Are Still Busy IN IRELAND RAID .:--ssz0:.2m scars | Relatives|| —c-tninmea ana pin nemstiched ation, wit 4 ant. vies " e ser ed at his hote oda the raps . le RDS hte farhie: wed eed wee In the movies I saw flashed on the screen a map of the hes ila fot thet ods ‘some a cTne, Stas, it nedors to ane this ribbon shoulder straps, $1 relatives or friends. The department is fo help in reuniting those who have been separated. Those whose relatives or friends are missing are invited 120 JERSEY SILK BLOOMERS. rectly to The Star. | Wpersont mentioned, a, tea” cofumn ae |] $2.95 \ missing are reduested also te report to| ; : ; The Siar, Other newspapers are invited —very good quality, well-reinforced, with small shir- ring at knee, $2.95. British Launch Big Move- ment in Ulster German Rhine territory occupied by the allies; then the statement that the French proposed to increase their army of occupation from 60,000 to 130,000; then that this would cost Germans 380 million marks more each year. When I was in Hamburg all the street cars bore placards inside inviting the people to a great meeting of protest. The city government, probably thru fear of international heart attacks. Mason, a master of wit and satire, was one of the picturesque figures of congress. BELFAST, June 16.—One of the! 4 «core of years ago he was sena- most extensive military raids yet at-| tor from [linois, and tn 1916 he re tempted in Ulster was under way in! turned to congress ag a representa- County Monaghan today. tiveat-large from Chicago. He was All military units were employed | twice reelected to the house, plained, and after he died we would i be married. He swept me off my ° feet. I knew little about love. I ‘ ‘was very much dazed by it all. “Then, in May, I had to tell him about the baby. I thoucht at first that he would be so proud. But he wasn't. “He seemed to change. At first te reprodece such items as will interest thelr communities. eee he was angry—and then he said he ‘would rend me to California and take are of me there until he arrived for our wedding. “When I got there, he forgot all about me, and—” the girl broke into sobs. Mrs. Kaufman took up the story consequences, had forbidden the meeting and locked the hall. It was in Hamburg, too, that I saw how the vaudeville theatres are used for anti-French propaganda purposes. One performer sang songs of his own composition. The refrain of one of these was “have patience.” The verse that brought down the house came when the singer said Germany would pay the French indemnity in a in a dragnet which practically cov ered the county. Airplanes aided the movement, and cavalry and motor. cycle squads sped over the rough! roads, cirting off the escape of Sinn Fein sympathizers. More than 5,000 persons were cap. tured in the first rush, but most of/ Mason was one of the principal supporters of Irish freedom in con- gress, being author of @ resolution to appoint a minister to Ireland, which would have amounted to recognition by this country. Mason would have been 11 July 7 on Phillip Delisle, CadiMae hotel, is seeking Miss Rosie Johnson or Wil- son, an old friend of his, from whom he has not heard for four years. She was in Everett four years ago, but he thinks she is here now. eee 300 JERSEY SILK VESTS. $2.95 : —fine, heavy quality, in bodice style with ribbon straps, or regulation style; some plain, others with The Western Union Telegraph Co. has a message for Bernard Trum. bull, addressed 1014 Holgate st., ad vising him of the death of a relative in Chicago, Ill. The Western Union them were released. A few were! there. “The baby was born tn a thread. Bare, foriorr little room tn the slums, where Erie lay friendless, hungry and without medical attention,” she usa ars—“ ; ” tho nd ye have patience. 1eld, to be taken to a prison camp | Poets Look Forward to Reckoning La Skier ad A poet on the same bill deciarmed his own poems. The | hemstitching or embroidery, $2.95. WALLACE, Idaho.—Funeral serv —Aisle Table, First Floor foes held for James F, Callahan, pio. neer mining man and capitalist, £ said. “Sie kept the little one with}theme of one was that no nation could be ground to dust!] The title of Sugar is now being made commer-| is unable to locate any such number en rege Germany, too, had a right to live. ussumed by the popes cially from corn as 1014 Holgate st. W 9 en Ganae In a shop window in Leipsic, near the famous university : | omen s a ‘Then, according to officials, the| Where thousands of German youths get their professiona! : Athletic Union Suits FREDERICK & NELSON | Reduced to $1.95 - FIFTH AVENUE AND PINE STREET , “-RWO hundred garments only, of cross-bar marqui- | sette and plain batiste in pink and white, regula- tion and bodice-top styles; very well-made in the prac- tical “athletic” mode. Reduced to $1.95. | —Aisle Table, First Floor education, I saw a book on the cover of which was a picture of:the cathedral of Strassburg. The caption on the cover was: “What we have lost! “O Strassburg, O Strassburg, wonderfully beautiful city “Torn away, but never to be forgotten German land!” In another shop window in the same vicinity was a, book with the title, “Der Tag des Gerichts”—‘the day of justice.” Under this was a grinning skull crowned with the red cap of a French soldier. A band on the book said it was a book of consolation for Germany. The author, Otto Autenrieth, is dreaming about wars in which England, France, Japan and America will be entangled with each other, during which Germany will slowly but surely rise to new strength and importance. He says France even now in the day of her triumph faces the time of her downfall. girl became temporarily crazed with grief, loneliness and the fact that the baby symbolized to her the crash of her first love. She placed a bit of Jace about the child's neck, drew the Snot tight and extinguished the tiny spark of life. Erie had a small, battered trunk She placed her baby’s body in it, ¥ and sent the trunk to a storage house. Then she went out to earn a living. ‘The body was discovered and police found Erie working at the Soldiers’ home at Sawtelle. She told authorities her and collapsed. (hospital since. Mrs. Kaufman says she has re ceived a letter from the man Erie ac- cuses. “In it he virtually promised to ‘@marry Erie,” she says. “Such a promise cannot be construed other. wise than as an admission of respon sibility for this terrible thing.” . M. Sturgis, head of the depart- ment of justice here, is working on the theory that this man, who was q last seen in Dallas, Tex., has fled to Mexicd, Sleuths are seeking hint. And the girl? # “I love him even now,” she says, and in answer to a question: “Yes, I would marry him. story— She has been in a In tomortow’s Star Bronner will tell you how the German slogan, “Buy no enemy go ” is working out. Se Cai ers CUNS FOR IRISH CASEIN COURT Six small children, ages range from 12 to 2 years, bereft of |Arms and Ammunition Seiz- ed at Hoboken their mother in a street car accident October 16, 1920, are cliging to their father, Marco Gilfone, in Judge Otis NEW YORK, June 16. of 600 machine guns and five cases alleged to have been | whose The b Past is—past.” W. Brinker’s court, where the father is suing the city for $25,000 dama Gilfone says his wife, Rosaria, was et at 23rd ave. and 0 p. m. when the Ownership | Suggestions for Your Camping Outfit the str crossing E. fender of a car knocked her down, Marion st. at jof ammunition, EXCEPTIONAL! The munitions were seized last + ‘ gbnsigned to Irish revolutionary) f 3 fracturing her skull when she Bit forces, was to be determined today New 8x10 Wall Tents......$10.50 she acted 1 Le } __ |in a court at Hoboken, New Jersey. | 7x1 Auto Tent... 12.50 Two in one tent, complete, weighs 15 Ibs. { Blankets, offi- The Northland ° An Economical, Efficient Refrigerator customs officials, The ship was ly-| Jing at an army pier in Hoboken, and was pout to sail for Belfast. The 7.50 6.50 We Are . | 50 |machine guns and ammunition were | S. Mess Pan and Plate.. * .60 | hidden In a coal bunker, where they | CONOMICAL in the use of ice, and moderately <haki Breeche it~ were said to have b disco od . : : . ro Wwoel..- at 0 4.50 ‘ |by a Peta ot he cee a ia priced, is this Refrigerator, yet efficient and “pgp theo Pht a a bap Sole pia Bete it sniper lee an alrs thoroughly dependable. Four sizes, all with hardwood J. 8. Lei Fe -+;. 1.00 was witnessed by a crowd of jeering 5 vhi ini ik fide Folding Cour, 350 fy men, city police took charge of the cases and white enamel lining. ‘olding Tables, $5.50 amp 4.00 Di ib |munitions on the strength of a I O t id Chairs .....7. eee |search warrant. The warrant w ce utside UF rer Mjddies. $4.76 to 10/00 1S rl u ors Jobtainea by Frank Williams, a Ne Capacity Dimensions Price (Cotton, Berge’ and Broada@oth) |York contractor, who said the re . d 21x16x40 $22.00 U. & Army We Belts . 25 nitions vere stolen fron his Ho. d V 1 ounds— X1Ox eee wee eeeee 0 Bettas Fosse + for mutta" "1 Upholstered in Tapestries and Velours 5 pounds— Sixt @xto baer U. 8. Army Pup Tenta..:.), 2.00 The Cosmopolitan Shipping com | < por 23x17x ay pbgngtta si U. 8 Army Ponchos “or pany, owners of the vessel, denied pounds— 26x17x44 ... aveees. $29.00 ¢ ¥ go dea 5 knowledge of the presence of the 6 AG , Y Ladies’ Khaki Garment pounds— 29x18x46 ... ++. $34.00 de 3.50 50 ito aboard. ( U. ~— tod Roast "ued 3p mire Hast Bide cleared for Norfolk er —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE i a ERASE Ra Va., shortly after the seizure and will | High and Low-back patterns; artistic SPECIAL Na Blue Sweaters (Spe- proceed from there to Lreland. With beautiful, well-up- and comfortable. holstered coverings on well-constructed frames in mahogany finish. Fourth Floor, Friday FREDERICK & NELSON FIFTH AVENUE AND PINE STREET cial) ...-.++ U. 8. Army and Navy Shoes $5.45 to Tents and Flies, all sizes, Camp Lewis Wireless FRESNO, Cal—Mountain fire near Raymond destroys 12 houses, causes | MATCHLESS C. C. Bender Co." 1609 Third Ave. The manufacture of paper yarn | joes been begun in Spain, 7.50